Primo Prime Rib Soup

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Awesome son that I am, I made a really tasty Roast Prime Rib of Beef with Horseradish Crust for my dad and step-mom and the rest of the family at Christmas this past year, and it rocked! Cheap son that I am, I also wanted to be sure I made the most of the pricey cut that I’d bought, so I looked for a way to use the meaty prime rib bones that were left over after the Christmas dinner.

I found several soup options, but the best one I found was a Prime Rib Beef Barley Soup over at discusscooking.com. I adapted it, made it, and took pretty pictures, and it was excellent. But I hadn’t gotten around to blogging it, because it seemed like something extravagant that people pretty rarely have on hand, and therefore not a particularly useful recipe for the folks we imagine to be our readership here.

So this perfect Fall weekend, when it is cool and drizzly outside, we’re making the prime rib soup again, and since we’re having it twice in a year, it seemed like a good time to share the recipe. Instead of thinking of it as a “richie-rich-we-eat-prime-rib-all-the-time-and-you-don’t” recipe, we’ll consider it an “OMG-I-can’t-afford-to-waste-any-of-this-expensive-prime-rib-I-cooked recipe” more in keeping with my normally thrifty and utilitarian ethic.

When I did it at Christmas, I had a little bit of leftover meat I threw into the soup as well, but this time I just have the bones, so I’m going to add a little bit of leftover smoked brisket to the soup, because, well, I need a lot of meat in a soup if I’m going to consider it a meal…

Dem bones, dem bones, dem prime rib bones…

We didn’t leave a lot of extra prime rib meat, but there was enough left for soup!

About Jeff Greene

Comments

Love this! We save EVERYTHING. And I mean EVERYTHING. At this moment in time, we have in the freezer chicken carcasses, shrimp shells, lobster shells, and corn cobs. (Amongst many other things I won’t mention.) That’s because we like to squeeze every gram of goodness we can out of something edible. I can’t help it – I grew up in an Asian household with parents from a third-world country. We SAVE EVERYTHING! But the good news is, this stuff is gold for soups. Gold. So I’m a fan of your prime rib soup. Because now you’re starting to look cheap, like me. And I like being in good company.

I don’t think saving every last bit for reuse is just an Asian thing…I think it’s more of a socio-economic thing than cultural. Jeff never kept his shells or bones until we started dating (my mom taught me to turn everything into soup later). I was raised by parents born here, but both of whom were born to really poor parents (who survived the Depression) and who miraculously managed to feed big families on just about no budget.

As an adult responsible for feeding a family now, I’m amazed at far my parents were even able to stretch meals — healthy ones at that — when we were kids.

Wow, this looks SOOOooo yummy! I’m gonna try it – thanks for posting! I make Turkey and Chicken vegey soup all the time – save all my vegetable water for the start of the stock and I love using leftovers to make more meals. So this is perfect.

A healthier version is to cook the bones separately first in 1/2 water and 1/2 stock, cook till the meat falls off the bones and dice the meat, reserving for later. Cool the broth some at room temp, then refrigerate for a few hours till the fat raises to the top of the pot. Skim it off, add your veggies, the reserved meat, barley, and adjust seasoning accordingly. Saves a ton of calories!!

Thanks for the comment and checking out the recipe. At 4.5 PointsPlus per serving, this is already just about one of the leanest healthiest meat-based soups one can eat — the equivalent of 2 bananas in Weight Watchers PointsPlus Values and packed with protein.

Kellie came over for prime rib on Christmas and delivered your message about the prime rib soup. I made the soup and we ate it for lunch. Excellent and I was surprised how much meat was on the bones. Thanks for the suggestion. Enjoy the rest of your holidays.